Tackling rising CO2 emissions from the residential sector
could make a vital contribution towards mitigating climate change,
according to a new report from the UCL Bartlett School of Planning.

Setting out the best strategies for achieving this
goal by studying examples of good practice globally, the Zero Carbon
Homes Project was inspired by a progressive new policy introduced in
2007 by the UK government to ensure that all new homes built post 2016
would be zero carbon. It was this move that marked the most radical
approach to residential carbon reduction to date.

Dr Jo Williams,
principal investigator of the Zero Carbon Homes Project from the UCL
Bartlett School of Planning said: "Since 2007 very little has happened
in the UK, at least in part due to the economic crisis and subsequent
housing slump. However there are other factors at play here not least a
lack of political support and significant institutional inertia to
change." The findings of the project are published today in the book Zero Carbon Homes - A Road Map.